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== Authors and kits == [[File:SWTPC Catalog 1969 pg06.jpg|thumb|right|A ''Popular Electronics'' project designed by Don Lancaster and sold by Daniel Meyer's Southwest Technical Products Corp.]] As Editor, Olivier Ferrell built a stable of authors who contributed interesting construction projects. These projects established the style of Popular Electronics for years to come. Two of the most prolific authors were Daniel Meyer and Don Lancaster. [[Daniel Meyer (engineer)|Daniel Meyer]] graduated from [[Texas State University|Southwest Texas State]] (1957) and became an engineer at [[Southwest Research Institute]] in San Antonio, Texas. He soon started writing hobbyist articles. The first was in ''[[Radio News#Popular Electronics and Electronics World|Electronics World]]'' (May 1960) and latter he had a 2 part cover feature for ''[[Radio-Electronics]]'' (October, November 1962). The March 1963 issue of ''Popular Electronics'' featured his ultrasonic listening device on the cover.<ref name = "Express News 1963">{{cite news | last = Newell | first = John K. | title = He Hears 'Inaudible' Bats At Night: San Antonio's Gadget Lets Humans Hear Ultrasonic Sounds | work = San Antonio Express and News | pages = 1βG, 5βG | date = March 17, 1963}}</ref> [[Don Lancaster]] graduated from [[Lafayette College]] (1961) and [[Arizona State University]] (1966). A 1960s fad was to have colored lights synchronized with music. This [[Psychedelia|psychedelic]] lighting was made economical by the development of the [[silicon controlled rectifier]] (SCR). Don's first published article was "Solid-State 3-Channel Color Organ" in the April 1963 issue of ''Electronics World''. He was paid $150 for the story.<ref>{{cite web | last = Lancaster | first = Don | author-link = Don Lancaster | title = The Way Things Were | work = The Blatant Opportunist # 63 | publisher = Synergetics |date=July 2001 | url = http://www.tinaja.com/glib/waywere.pdf |access-date= September 11, 2008 }}</ref> The projects in ''Popular Electronics'' changed from vacuum tube to solid state in the early 1960s. Tube circuits used a metal chassis with sockets, transistor circuits worked best on a [[printed circuit board]]. They would often contain components that were not available at the local electronics parts store. Dan Meyer saw the business opportunity in providing circuit boards and parts for the ''Popular Electronics'' projects. In January 1964 he left Southwest Research Institute to start an electronics kit company. He continued to write articles and ran the mail order kit business from his home in San Antonio, Texas. By 1965 he was providing the kits for other authors such as Lou Garner. In 1967 he sold a kit for Don Lancaster's "IC-67 Metal Locator". In early 1967 Meyer moved his growing business from his home to a new building on a 3-acre (12,000 m<sup>2</sup>) site in San Antonio. The Daniel E. Meyer Company (DEMCO) became Southwest Technical Products Corporation ([[SWTPC]]) that fall. In 1967, ''Popular Electronics'' had 6 articles by Dan Meyer and 4 by Don Lancaster. Seven of that year's cover stories featured kits sold by SWTPC. In the years 1966 to 1971 SWTPC's authors wrote 64 articles and had 25 cover stories in ''Popular Electronics''. (Don Lancaster alone had 23 articles and 10 were cover stories.) The ''[[San Antonio Express-News]]'' did a feature story on Southwest Technical Products in November 1972. "Meyer built his mail-order business from scratch to more than $1 million in sales in six years." The company was shipping 100 kits a day from 1800 square feet (1,700 m<sup>2</sup>) of buildings.<ref name = "News Express 1972">{{cite news | last = Barnes | first = Bill | title = Do-It Yourselfers Propel Kit Maker to High Levels | work = San Antonio Express-News | page = 10, Business Section | date = November 19, 1972}}</ref> Others noticed SWTPC success. [[Forrest Mims]], a founder of [[Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems|MITS]] (Altair 8800), tells about his "[[Light-emitting diode|Light-Emitting Diodes]]" cover story (''Popular Electronics'', November 1970) in an interview with ''[[Creative Computing]]''.<ref>{{cite magazine | author = Forrest M. Mims III |date=November 1984 | title = The Altair story; early days at MITS |magazine= Creative Computing | volume = 10 | issue = 11 | page =17 | publisher = Creative Computing | url = http://www.atarimagazines.com/creative/v10n11/17_The_Altair_story_early_d.php |access-date= September 11, 2008}}</ref> <blockquote> In March, I sold my first article to Popular Electronics magazine, a feature about light-emitting diodes. At one of our midnight meetings I suggested that we emulate Southwest Technical Products and develop a project article for Popular Electronics. The article would give us free advertising for the kit version of the project, and the magazine would even pay us for the privilege of printing it! </blockquote> The November 1970 issue also has an article by Forrest M. Mims and [[Ed Roberts (computer engineer)|Henry E. Roberts]] titled "Assemble an LED Communicator - The Opticon."<ref>{{cite magazine | author = Forrest Mims |author2=Henry E. Roberts |date=November 1970 | title = Assemble an LED Communicator - The Opticom |magazine= Popular Electronics | volume = 33 | issue = 5 | pages =45β50, 98β99 | publisher = Ziff Davis}}</ref> A kit of parts could be ordered from MITS in Albuquerque, New Mexico. ''Popular Electronics'' paid $400 for the article.
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